698 research outputs found
Health care for older adults in Europe: how has it evolved and what are the challenges?
Geriatric medicine has evolved to an accepted specialty in 23 European countries. Despite much heterogeneity of postgraduate geriatric curricula, European societies have succeeded in defining a common core curriculum with a list of minimum training requirements for obtaining the specialty title of geriatric medicine. Geriatricians play a leading role in finding solutions for the challenges of health care of multimorbid older patients. One of these challenges is the demographic shift with the number of adults aged 80 years and older in Europe expected to double by 2050. Although geriatric units will play a role in the care of frail older patients, new care models are needed to integrate the comprehensive geriatric assessment approach for the care of the vast majority of older patients admitted to non-geriatric hospital units. Over the last few years, co-management approaches have been developed to address this gap. Innovative models are also in progress for ambulatory care, prevention and health promotion programs, and long-term care. Efforts to implement geriatric learning objectives in undergraduate training, and the generation of practice guidelines for geriatric syndromes may help to improve the quality of care for older patients
Charmonium spectrum in an unquenched quark model
The effects of virtual light quark pairs on the charmonium spectrum are
studied. Pair creation is modelled with a ``" vertex and
intermediate states are summed up to 2S excitations. Quark model parameters are
obtained by fitting to 12 well-known charmonium states, allowing for feedback
between the decaying particle and the induced mass shifts. Both of these
technical steps are new and improve agreement with the experimental spectrum.
In general, the masses receive small shifts once model parameters are refit.
This is true in almost cases except the multiplet, which
experiences upwards mass shifts of order 150 MeV, has the ordering of the
multiplet rearranged, and pushes the erstwhile state well
above threshold--observations that clarify the nature of the
enigmatic $X(3872)
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action Opportunity for HIF in Iran
Cooperation in fusion energy research and
high-energy accelerators has been a “bridge over
troubled waters” for most of a century. Physics
research has traditionally been an international
endeavor, involving the earliest accelerator
developments, and hitting a hiatus only during
World War II. Fusion energy research using
magnetic confinement was internationalized by
the Geneva meeting in 1958. Iran is and has been
a participant in fusion research, even during the
troubles of the past couple decades..
Vacuum Polarization and Dynamical Chiral Symmetry Breaking: Phase Diagram of QED with Four-Fermion Contact Interaction
We study chiral symmetry breaking for fundamental charged fermions coupled
electromagnetically to photons with the inclusion of four-fermion contact
self-interaction term. We employ multiplicatively renormalizable models for the
photon dressing function and the electron-photon vertex which minimally ensures
mass anomalous dimension = 1. Vacuum polarization screens the interaction
strength. Consequently, the pattern of dynamical mass generation for fermions
is characterized by a critical number of massless fermion flavors above which
chiral symmetry is restored. This effect is in diametrical opposition to the
existence of criticality for the minimum interaction strength necessary to
break chiral symmetry dynamically. The presence of virtual fermions dictates
the nature of phase transition. Miransky scaling laws for the electromagnetic
interaction strength and the four-fermion coupling, observed for quenched QED,
are replaced by a mean-field power law behavior corresponding to a second order
phase transition. These results are derived analytically by employing the
bifurcation analysis, and are later confirmed numerically by solving the
original non-linearized gap equation. A three dimensional critical surface is
drawn to clearly depict the interplay of the relative strengths of interactions
and number of flavors to separate the two phases. We also compute the
beta-function and observe that it has ultraviolet fixed point. The power law
part of the momentum dependence, describing the mass function, reproduces the
quenched limit trivially. We also comment on the continuum limit and the
triviality of QED.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Decays and spectrum of bottom and bottom strange mesons
The strong decay amplitudes and radiative partial widths of orbital and
radially excited states of and mesons are presented. These results
are obtained with a nonrelativistic potential quark model, the nonrelativistic
reduction of the electromagnetic transition operator, and the "" model
of strong decays. The predictions are compared to experiment where possible and
assignments for the recently discovered states, , ,
, , , and , are made.Comment: 36 pages, 3 figure
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action Opportunity for HIF in Iran
Cooperation in fusion energy research and
high-energy accelerators has been a “bridge over
troubled waters” for most of a century. Physics
research has traditionally been an international
endeavor, involving the earliest accelerator
developments, and hitting a hiatus only during
World War II. Fusion energy research using
magnetic confinement was internationalized by
the Geneva meeting in 1958. Iran is and has been
a participant in fusion research, even during the
troubles of the past couple decades..
Dirac Quantization Condition for Monopole in Noncommutative Space-Time
Since the structure of space-time at very short distances is believed to get
modified possibly due to noncommutativity effects and as the Dirac Quantization
Condition (DQC), , probes the magnetic field point
singularity, a natural question arises whether the same condition will still
survive. We show that the DQC on a noncommutative space in a model of dynamical
noncommutative quantum mechanics remains the same as in the commutative case to
first order in the noncommutativity parameter , leading to the
conjecture that the condition will not alter in higher orders.Comment: 11 page
Vitamin D with Calcium reduces mortality: patient level pooled analysis of 70,528 patients from eight major vitamin D trials
Introduction: Vitamin D may affect multiple health outcomes. If so, an effect on mortality is to be expected. Using pooled data from randomized controlled trials, we performed individual patient data (IPD) and trial level meta-analyses to assess mortality among participants randomized to either vitamin D alone or vitamin D with calcium.
Subjects and Methods: Through a systematic literature search, we identified 24 randomized controlled trials reporting data on mortality in which vitamin D was given either alone or with calcium. From a total of 13 trials with more than 1000 participants each, eight trials were included in our IPD analysis. Using a stratified Cox regression model, we calculated risk of death during 3 yr of treatment in an intention-to-treat analysis. Also, we performed a trial level meta-analysis including data from all studies.
Results: The IPD analysis yielded data on 70,528 randomized participants (86.8% females) with a median age of 70 (interquartile range, 62–77) yr. Vitamin D with or without calcium reduced mortality by 7% [hazard ratio, 0.93; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.88–0.99]. However, vitamin D alone did not affect mortality, but risk of death was reduced if vitamin D was given with calcium (hazard ratio, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84–0.98). The number needed to treat with vitamin D plus calcium for 3 yr to prevent one death was 151. Trial level meta-analysis (24 trials with 88,097 participants) showed similar results, i.e. mortality was reduced with vitamin D plus calcium (odds ratio, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.88–0.99), but not with vitamin D alone (odds ratio, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.91–1.06).
Conclusion: Vitamin D with calcium reduces mortality in the elderly, whereas available data do not support an effect of vitamin D alone
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